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Detecting 'Hypervirulent' Salmonella Strains
updated: Apr 12, 2012, 2:05 PM
Source: UCSB
A recent discovery of "hypervirulent" Salmonella bacteria has given UC Santa
Barbara researchers Michael Mahan and Douglas Heithoff a means to potentially
prevent food poisoning outbreaks from these particularly powerful strains. Their
findings, in a paper titled "Intraspecies Variation in the Emergence of
Hyperinfectious Bacterial Strains in Nature," have been published in the journal
PLoS Pathogens.
Salmonella is the most common cause of infection, hospitalization, and death due
to foodborne illness in the U.S. This burden may continue to worsen due to the
emergence of new strains that would tax current health-control efforts. To
address this problem, researchers sought out -- and found -- hypervirulent
strains that present a potential risk to food safety and the livestock industry.
An international team of scientists -- which also included Robert Sinsheimer and
William Shimp from UCSB; Yi Xie and Bart Weimer from UC Davis; and John House
from University of Sydney, Australia -- conducted a global search for
hypervirulent Salmonella strains. They were found among isolates derived from
livestock, and rendered current vaccines obsolete.
Bacteria behave like a Trojan Horse, exposing their weapons only after
initiating infection. "These strains exhibit this behavior in the extreme --
essentially having a ‘5th gear' they can switch to during infection," said
Heithoff, lead author of the paper.
Previous efforts to find hypervirulent strains were unsuccessful since bacteria
behave much like their less-virulent cousins after environmental exposure. "The
trick was to assess their virulence during infection -- before they switch back
to a less-virulent state in the lab," said Professor Mahan.
Now that researchers know what to look for, they are developing methods to
rapidly detect and discriminate the more harmful strains from their less-
virulent cousins. The strategy is aided by a special medium utilized by the
researchers that forces the bacteria to reveal their weapons in the laboratory
-- the first step in the design of therapeutics to combat them.
Humans usually get Salmonella food poisoning from eating contaminated beef,
chicken, or eggs. However, animal waste can contaminate fields where fruits,
nuts, and vegetables are grown, thus posing a particular health concern for
vegetarians. The threat is exacerbated when these foods are not cooked.
Salmonella control efforts are expensive -- recent estimates place this cost up
to $14.6 billion annually in the U.S.
As hypervirulent strains pose a potential risk to human and animal health,
mitigation efforts warrant researchers' careful attention. "Now that we have
identified the problem -- and potential solutions -- we just need to get to
work," Heithoff said.
This research was launched with support from The G. Harold & Leila Y. Mathers
Foundation, which then leveraged additional funding from the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, National Institutes of Health, U.S. Army, and Santa Barbara Cottage
Hospital Research Program.
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